July 4, 2015, Saturday

To the Editor: Eric A. Posner's denunciation of both the International Court of Justice and the recently established International Criminal Court in The Hague (''All Justice, Too, Is Local,'' Op-Ed, Dec. 30) repudiates the highest ideals espoused...

To the Editor: President Bush and Secretary of State Colin L. Powell are to be lauded for finally acknowledging that mass killings, rapes and displacement of civilians in the Darfur region of Sudan may properly be characterized as genocide...

To the Editor: Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld's declaration that the United States supports the rule of law was gratifying (excerpts from the Congressional hearing, May 8). It might have been more convincing if we had not repudiated the...

To the Editor: ''Plea Deals Being Used to Clear Balkan War Tribunal's Docket'' (front page, Nov. 18) depicts Bush administration pressures to wind up the United Nations tribunal for war crimes committed in the Balkans. Speed and efficiency are...

To the Editor: Re ''U.S. Suspends Aid to 35 Countries Over New International Court'' (news article, July 2): The administration has taken every conceivable step to undermine the International Criminal Court. Insisting upon immunity for all...

July 3, 2003, Thursday

To the Editor: Re ''U.S. Lists Iraqis to Punish, or to Work With'' (front page, Feb. 26): President Bush has a unique opportunity to uphold the rule of law. If the Security Council fails to issue an unambiguous mandate to use force, the...

To the Editor: Senators Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Richard G. Lugar call for serious discussion of what can be done to remove Saddam Hussein from power (Op-Ed, July 31). In reviewing the military options, no reference is made to the United Nations.

To the Editor: Ruth Wedgwood (Op-Ed, Dec. 31) argues that Al Qaeda members should not receive the extraordinary protections provided in domestic trials. But curbing the rule of law will not serve America's long-range interests. Following...

To the Editor: Re ''Making Rules in the World Between War and Peace'' (Week in Review, Aug. 19): Legal experts disagree on whether assassination of political adversaries is illegal murder or permissible self-defense. While international...